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originally posted by: seagull
Nope.
Still luvs me some fresh halibut, and salmon.
If anything curtails my consumption, it won't be Fukashima. It'll be the sky rocketing prices.
originally posted by: Psynic
originally posted by: musicismagic
It's just getting worse.
www3.nhk.or.jp...
I don't think I'd want to be living in the Tokyo area these days.
I live south of Tokyo and yes, the sushi houses are still packed to capacity here.
How long do you think Tokyo can maintain the pretense that it will be hosting the 2020 Olympics?
originally posted by: musicismagic
originally posted by: Psynic
originally posted by: musicismagic
It's just getting worse.
www3.nhk.or.jp...
I don't think I'd want to be living in the Tokyo area these days.
I live south of Tokyo and yes, the sushi houses are still packed to capacity here.
How long do you think Tokyo can maintain the pretense that it will be hosting the 2020 Olympics?
I just read here on ATS that Japan passed a law that no one can report the news about Fukushima without the Japanese approval or face 10 years in prison. So all should be clear by 2020 to come to Japan. No one will know about the true dangers of this mishap over greed and profit. We live in a medical university city and the doctors are hush hush about childbirths, but eventually, the doctors families and extended family and friends will become affected and that is when the sh.. will hit the fan. Personally, Fukushima is not that faraway from the surrounding Tokyo landscape and that landscape is mostly agriculture, food we eat. I do believe the rain contains poison these days, but I have no knowledge on how this radiation stuff works in the air.
Do I think the Olypics will be affected, maybe so, time will tell. Also if not, the excuse will be " a shortage of laborors" to do the construction work. Yes, there is a severe shortage of manpower these days to do such work. The young men here, not all or not many, but the fact is, they have become soft, both mentally and physically.
originally posted by: Psynic
The price of Pacific Tuna at the worlds biggest Tuna auction FELL 95% in 2014. The Japanese WON'T eat it!
.
originally posted by: Alekto
originally posted by: Psynic
The price of Pacific Tuna at the worlds biggest Tuna auction FELL 95% in 2014. The Japanese WON'T eat it!
.
That's just bollocks talk. I live in Japan and I visit sushi shops at least once a week. I have never heard of ANYONE refusing tuna.
originally posted by: Psynic
originally posted by: Alekto
originally posted by: Psynic
The price of Pacific Tuna at the worlds biggest Tuna auction FELL 95% in 2014. The Japanese WON'T eat it!
.
That's just bollocks talk. I live in Japan and I visit sushi shops at least once a week. I have never heard of ANYONE refusing tuna.
It ain't Pacific Tuna.
www.japantoday.com...
originally posted by: Alekto
originally posted by: Psynic
originally posted by: Alekto
originally posted by: Psynic
The price of Pacific Tuna at the worlds biggest Tuna auction FELL 95% in 2014. The Japanese WON'T eat it!
.
That's just bollocks talk. I live in Japan and I visit sushi shops at least once a week. I have never heard of ANYONE refusing tuna.
It ain't Pacific Tuna.
www.japantoday.com...
Now you're being deliberately obtuse. Not a single person ever asks if the tuna is pacific or otherwise. They just want to eat tuna. I have never witnessed anyone ask that question.
originally posted by: Jennyfrenzy
a reply to: openminded2011
It's sad.
originally posted by: Uphill
a reply to: openminded2011
Openminded and everyone, thanks for the topics you raise here. Here's my understanding thus far:
1. On the question of potential radioisotope contamination of seaweeds or other ocean foodstuffs, the definitive answer is a system of testing to rule out contamination. One of you mentions geiger counters, but for 3-dimensional objects, the far more expensive (and far more complex to operate) scintillation equipment is actually the appropriate technology for food testing. I buy seaweed from Larch Hanson, who operates a beyond-organic seaweed collection, processing, and sales business. All his sea products pass stringent scintillation testing by physicists at the University of Maine.
www.theseaweedman.com...
2. I have no financial connection with Larch, nor with the global nuclear industry, nor with the anti-nuclear community.
3. Virtually all atlantic salmon nowadays is from a fish farm.
4. Regarding RickinVA's comments about post-Fukushima radiation, I agree. Some types of ionizing radiation (IR) are more equal than others in harming biological tissue. Not only is the type of IR biologically significant, however, but even more so is its bio-magnification throughout the food chain.
5. According to The Economist magazine, whose Fukushima reports are sporadic but highly accurate, Japan's State Secrets law actually does not become law until December 2014.
6. When buying seaweed or sea salt, be aware that the clock is ticking for its iodine content. Iodine, like all other members of its halogen family, is volatile. Iodine thus sublimes (evaporates) out of sea products within 2 years. So don't buy a 5-year supply of high-iodine seaweed, for example ... you won't get your money's worth after 2 years. In March 2011, after the 2nd Fukushima reactor explosion, my family and I went shopping at independent or co-op natural foods stores for storable food products, such as sacks of grain, etc. In my then-ignorance, I thought it was a clever idea to buy lots of naturally processed sea salt, so I did. Oops, its former iodine content is now all gone!
7. Water: One of you suggested aquaponics, which is related to the larger question of safe drinking water. In my article Lessons From Fukushima, now in print, I describe fundamental mathematical reasons (common exponential decay) why no water filters (nor air filters, either) will ever remove 100% of IR. You know how people have heated opinions about food safety? Discussions about safe drinking water tend to be more emotional than even the food discussions. My family and I have been pressuring Consumer Reports to start testing water filters which claim to "remove" IR. Until that happens, I recommend deep spring water as your source of drinking water. Due to competitive pressures, spring water vendors have had to post analytic laboratory reports on their websites. Several discount chain stores here in California sell deep spring water for 99 cents a gallon. ...Getting back to aquaponics, if you use that method, cover your tank with a roof of some kind so that rainfall contamination does not occur. You will also have to get scintillation verification for fertilizers, however. Larch sells a seaweed-based fertilizer. That type of verified product will become more widely available due to consumer pressure. (For businesses, those testing expenses are tax-deductible.)
Note: I recommend deep spring water because it requires up to 10s of thousands of years to develop IR contamination. In contrast to that long time frame, I found one academic source which finds IR contamination even in deep wells within five years. All other fresh waters, termed "surface waters," develop IR contamination in a shorter timeframe, even aquifers.
8. Be doubly careful with any supplements. Most supplements which have claims for healing IR exposure have little track record, especially those like zeolite which are being offered online. If you are taking zeolite, for example, be aware that periodic blood tests are necessary to insure that your body's supply of micronutrients is not being affected; for those who are pregnant, zeolite has no track record of safety thus far. Supplements should also be tested for IR, such as spirulina, mostly sourced from the Pacific Northwest, which according to independent nuclear engineer Arnie Gundersen received the greatest hammering from the initial Fukushima air-borne IR explosions ... especially the geographic areas in and around the Cascade mountain range. Kyolic (aged garlic), often recommended for its enhancement of human immune response to IR, should not be used by those whose physicians recommend an aspirin per day ... for those taking both aspirin and Kyolic, the risk of later hemorrhagic stroke is increased. Bottom line: Make certain that your medical care provider is aware of all medications and supplements that you are taking.